The CEO's Regret: You made me your lie, I become your Loss

Chapter 142: There is a problem



Now. They stood on the edge of something bigger. Their first launch. The studio buzzed with life. Final fittings. Last-minute adjustments. Models walking carefully between racks of clothing that shimmered with identity and intention.

Excitement. Nervous energy. Hope. Amara stood in the middle of it all, one hand resting instinctively on her belly.

Breathing it in. Every moment. Every sacrifice. Every sleepless night. From across the room. Julian watched her. Just like he always did.

From a distance. Pride was written in the quiet way his eyes softened when they landed on her. He wished he could do more. Be more. Take the weight off her shoulders completely.

But he understood something now. This... This was hers. So he stayed where she needed him to be. Not in front. Not in control. But always. Right there.

And somewhere beyond the walls. Sebastian watched too. Not inside. Never inside. From a distance. From places he wasn’t meant to be. From moments he wasn’t invited into. Each time he tried to get closer. He failed. All he could do was watch her grow.

Watch her build a life that no longer had space for him. Watch the way she touched her belly. Watch the way Julian stood near her, even in silence, even in distance, and still somehow belonged.

And for the first time. Sebastian began to understand something he had refused to accept before. Some things. Once lost. Don’t wait for you to come back. They move on. They build. They become something greater.

And sometimes. All you’re left with... Is the view from afar. Every hospital visit became a ritual. Not rushed. Not careless. Intentional. Julian never sent a driver.

Never delegated it. He showed up by himself. Every single time. "Careful," he murmured as he helped Amara out of the car, one hand steady at her waist, the other hovering just in case she needed more support.

She didn’t always need it. But he offered anyway. The nurses began to recognize them. Not because they asked for attention. But because of how quietly consistent they were.

The way Julian listened. The way Amara softened, just slightly, when he was near. "Have you been taking your vitamins?" the doctor asked gently during one visit.

Amara nodded. Before she could say anything. Julian spoke. "She missed two days last week." Amara turned to him, eyes narrowing slightly.

"You’re keeping count?" His expression didn’t change. "Of course I am." And just like that. Something warm flickered in her chest. Outside. A different kind of presence lingered.

Sebastian. He stood across the street more times than he could count, watching the entrance like a man waiting for something that never came.

Watching Julian open doors. Watching him guide Amara carefully. Watching him exist in a place Sebastian believed should have been his. One afternoon. He couldn’t take it anymore.

He walked in. Straight past the reception. Confidence masking desperation. "I’m here for Amara..." he started, flashing a name that still carried weight in certain circles.

But not here. Not today. "I’m sorry, sir," the nurse said politely, blocking his path. "We can’t release any patient information." Sebastian’s jaw tightened. "I’m the father of her child."

The words came out sharp. Possessive. Almost demanding. The nurse didn’t flinch. "Unless you are listed and authorized, we cannot confirm or deny anything." Denied.

Just like that. Sebastian stepped back slowly, anger simmering beneath the surface. He exhaled sharply, running a hand through his hair. I didn’t do all this... His thoughts burned, dark and restless. I didn’t come this far... just to watch another man become a father to my son.

The word still felt foreign. Son. Something he hadn’t been ready for. Something he had rejected. Until it was no longer within his reach. And now. It consumed him. Across the city. Another empire was quietly collapsing.

Amira stood in the middle of her office, the once-polished space now feeling too large... too empty... too unstable. "Where did all the money go?" Her voice cracked through the room, sharp with panic she could no longer hide.

Leo didn’t even flinch. "We invested in expansion projects," he said smoothly, leaning back as none of this touched him. "Some didn’t go as planned. Losses happen."

"Losses?" Amira echoed, her laugh brittle, disbelieving. "Millions, Leo. We are talking about millions."

"They’ll come back," he assured her, the same tone, the same confidence he had used every time before. "The next project will recover everything." The next project. Always the next project.

And she believed him. Again. Because she had to. Because admitting the truth meant admitting she had already lost everything. Board members had stopped calling her directly.

Meetings happened without her. Decisions were made behind closed doors. Outsiders. Watching. Waiting. Positioning themselves carefully, like predators circling something already wounded.

Amira wasn’t blind. She saw it. Felt it. But she didn’t know how to stop it anymore. That night. For the first time in weeks. She didn’t look at financial reports. Didn’t call Leo. Didn’t plan the next move.

She turned on the television. And there. Amara. Standing under soft lights, surrounded by cameras, confidence wrapped around her like something she had finally grown into.

Her hair is longer now. Softer. Flowing past her shoulders again. Alive. Radiant. Untouchable. Amira’s breath caught. For a moment. She didn’t see the woman on the screen.

She saw the past. The version of Amara she had once known. The one she had broken. "I miss you..."

The words slipped out before she could stop them. Barely a whisper. But even as they left her lips. She knew. There was no going back. Not this time. On the screen. Amara smiled. And the crowd applauded. And somewhere between the applause and the silence in her office.

Amira finally understood something she had been running from for far too long. She hadn’t just lost control of the company. She had lost Amara. For good.

—-

Amara didn’t look up from the fabric samples spread across her desk.

Her fingers moved slowly over the textures, linen, silk blends, soft cotton designed specifically for comfort, stretch, and dignity. Every piece in front of her carried months of work. Sleepless nights. Risk. Faith.

Three days.

Just three days until launch. "Janet... everything ready?" Her voice was steady, but there was a quiet urgency underneath it. "We cannot afford delays now." Janet hesitated at the doorway. "That’s the thing, ma’am... there’s a little problem."

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